One-pot self-assembly: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
→Related: added link to yet unwritten page Sequential flush by washout selfassembly |
m →Related |
||
| Line 21: | Line 21: | ||
== Related == | == Related == | ||
* The complementary method: [[Sequential flush by washout | * The complementary method: [[Sequential flush by washout self-assembly]] | ||
* [[Self assembly]] | * [[Self assembly]] | ||
* [[One-pot reaction]] – chemistry | * [[One-pot reaction]] – chemistry | ||
Revision as of 08:44, 30 April 2026
As the name implies all ingredients are mixed together simultaneously "in one pot".
- faster process
- less control
- ... (wiki-TODO: expand here)
Artificial
A good part of artificial selfassembly is still done as one-pot reactions.
Notable exception are demonstrations og hierarchical assembly with structural DNA nanotechnology.
In nature
Nanobiology averts full-on one-pot self-assembly by compartmentalizations
- disjunct surfaces (lipid walls)
- disjunct volumes (verticles enclose by lipid walls)
- means of transport inbetween
Related
- The complementary method: Sequential flush by washout self-assembly
- Self assembly
- One-pot reaction – chemistry
The complement to one-pot self-assembly is iterative self-assembly